Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Secular humanism in Peru[1]

In 1974, when I was 13 years old, I heard on a Lima radio station the offer to give a copy of the New Testament to those who requested it. Since I liked to read, I asked for and received the copy and so the giver, who was a pastor, invited me to visit his small evangelical church. It was the beginning of my experience as a biblical Christian believer and thus my departure from the Catholicism that had been instilled in me at home and at school. Due to my inquisitive personality, I remember that when I was already 16 and finishing high school, I sometimes had doubts: “What if this isn't true?” A friend I met at that church and was baptized with me, however, later introduced me to reading books like Erich Fromm's The  Dogma of Christ , and we stopped going to there.

The following year, in 1978, I entered the career of human medicine at the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos (UNMSM), but due to my doubts and concerns about knowing more about sciences and humanities became more pronounced, I read, among others, the work Why I am not a Christian by Bertrand Russell, and I changed to the philosophy school in 1983. While I was a student there, the interdisciplinary magazine Sollertia   [2], directed by a biology student[3], published some of my articles where I questioned God and religion. In 1992 I gained a degree in philosophy and entered university teaching at my alma mater.

In 1994 I published my first book Doesn't God Exist? Essays on the philosophy of religion based on those and other writings. Shortly afterward I had epistolary communication with non-believing philosophers Paul Kurtz (USA) and Finngeir Hiorth (Norway) due to my interest in the magazines Skeptical Inquirer and Free Inquiry founded by the former and the humanist and atheist books of the latter.

In 1995 I released my second book  Authoritarianism and Humanism according to Erich Fromm. His vision of man, religion and ethics  that was the thesis with which I obtained my degree in philosophy. 


In 1996, thanks to an invitation from Kurtz to the 13th World Humanist Congress organized by the International Humanist and Ethical Union (IHEU) and the Mexican Ethical-Rationalist Association (AMER), currently extinct, in Mexico City I was able to meet him in person and Hiorth who were, from then until before he died in 2012, my mentors and role models, in addition to having the privilege of translating several of his articles and books into Spanish. There I showed them copies of my book Doesn't God Exist? (the 4th ed. will be released in 2024) published under the nascent seal of Ediciones Revista Peruana de Filosofía Aplicada (ERPFA), our freethought publishing house, which was born under the name of our academic periodical publication of the same name, RPFA ( in 2024 he turns 30 and his 25th number should be released). 


Also in 1996, ERPFA was formally registered in the public records of Peru as Asociación Ediciones de la RPFA (AERPFA), the first institution in our country that became a member of the IHEU (now called Humanists International), the international organization of humanists , atheist, rationalist, secularist, skeptic, free thinking and ethical culture groups of the world. Currently our publishing house is called Applied Philosophy Editions with more than 50 books published to date with Spanish translations of works by Hiorth (15),  Kurtz (4)  and other authors. 




In 1998, with a teaching colleague from the UNMSM and 2 bachelors from the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru, we founded the Peruvian Arreligious Movement (MPA), which carried out public activities such as talks, debates and video forums, and had as its official organ the magazine Eupraxophia (“Wisdom for a good life”, a term with Greek roots created by Kurtz), to disseminate criticism of religious beliefs and an alternative life with secular values   


That same year, the Committee for the Investigation of the Paranormal, Pseudoscientific and Irrational in Peru (CIPSI-PERÚ) was founded with its official periodical publication the magazine Neo-Skepsis (New Skepticism).     


In 2002, part of the MPA members formed the  Peruvian Humanist-Arreligious Movement (MPHA)  to continue with the activities of the MPA, which were "temporarily" suspended, and the publication of Eupraxophia However, subsequently, the MPA was able to carry out 2 more last activities


Then there was the failed attempt to find, this time with strangers, the Peruvian Ethical-Rationalist Association (APER).

In 2006, with the  Kurtz Center for Inquiry  and the AERPFA, at the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos in Lima, we organized the II Ibero-American Congress of Critical Thinking. 


In 2008, Rationalist Humanists of Peru (HURA-PERU) was founded and  we also held, in addition to talks, debates and video forums,  4 seminars on science, pseudoscience and pseudo medical therapies, other seminars and activities, such as talks and debates, inside and outside of the UNMSM  between 2011 and 2019and continued publishing  Eupraxophia and Neo-Skepsis [4] , and a pair books. In 2023 HURA-PERU has gained a legal status under the name of the Institute of Rationalist Humanism of Peru (IHURA-PERU)  





It should be added that we have a YouTube channel called  Filosofía Aplicada TV  where you can see our activities: talks, debates, seminars, interviews with Peruvian and international intellectuals, documentaries, micro programs critical of supernaturalist and paranormalist claims.


For our work in disseminating humanist, rationalist and skeptical points of view, Kurtz named us  Center for Inquiry-Peru, one of the subsidiaries that the Center for Inquiry has around the world, the institution he founded together with the now called Committee for Skeptical. Inquiry.

And we also teach, when possible, this kind of criticism to university students in our country of ancient Andean-Catholic syncretic tradition where, especially in the mountain provinces and even in its universities, natural forces are still worshiped, especially to the hills, the earth and the water, with Our Fathers and Hail Marys.

In 2009, an administrator of the digital group  Atheists in Peru invited me to form an organization of non-believers in the country with other non-believers and by vote the name of the  Peruvian Association of Atheists (APERAT) was chosen,  which was only successfully registered in the public registries in 2011. In its first stage, we were able to carry out various activities such as talks, debates, video forums, etc. Currently, in addition to having changed its original logo and statute, it presents itself as an organization that has secular humanism among its pillars and carries out public activities from time to time.


On the other hand, the Secular and Humanist Society of Peru (SSH), an organization separate from ours, formally born in 2012, has published the Humanist Magazine  (3 issues between 2021 and 2023), the  Futuro Hoy Magazine  (7 between 2020 and 2023), and the book  The Invisible World. Essays with critical thinking (2020) by biologists Hector Aponte and Daniel Barona and psychologist Victor Garcia-Belaunde where they explain biological evolution, supposed visits from extraterrestrials and ghostly apparitions, as well as flat-eartherism, among other topics.


The SSH promoted two skeptical virtual TV programs: The Skeptical Apple (2016-2021) with Víctor García-Belaúnde and Para Normales de la Noche [5]  (2011-2022) with communicator Andy Landacay, as well as the podcast  Skeptical Guide  (2015 -2017) with the then university student Aurora Austral. 

Since December 2023, through a statement posted on the website and Facebook of the SSH, its founding president and the last one to date, reported that its activities were suspended “indefinitely” and that “both membership and the board of directors were going to be dissolved.” They cited a lack of time and money to dedicate to the organization, as well as “irreconcilable differences on the board” regarding its goals and the difficulty of “agreeing on what activities we should pursue and what positions we should take regarding different incidents on the national scene.” .

But despite the discussions and disagreements that occurred and continue to occur in any of these groups, currently there is a variety of pages, especially on Facebook, both collectively and individually, by atheists and independent secular humanists from various parts of the country,[6]  which demonstrates the growth and the presence, at least virtual, of Peruvian non-believers.

 




[1] Although we can find humanistic approaches in thinkers from ancient Greece and China, humanism itself is a cultural current that appeared in the era of the European Renaissance to once again focus on the human being without yet being a non-believer. At present there is more than one humanism, we can talk about: 1) religious humanism itself, thus there would be Jewish, Christian, Muslim humanism, etc., 2) universalist or siloist humanism, based on the pseudonym Silo of the Argentine writer Mario Rodríguez Cobos (1938-2010), concerned with personal, social and political change in the world, but also accused of being sectarian and messianic, and 3) rationalist, skeptical, non-religious, atheistic or secular humanism that denies the supernatural and divine (there are groups called humanists Jews and “religious” who follow this vein). Traditionally in Western countries when talking about humanism they refer to secular humanism (based on several manifestos that appeared between the 20th and 21st centuries) which is politically liberal although there are also atheistic humanisms such as socialist, communist and anarchist.

Widely understood in our country, we find books such as that of the Peruvian philosopher  Francisco Miró Quesada Cantuarias (1918-2019):  Humanism and revolution  (Lima: Casa de la Cultura del Perú, 1969), where he does not question religion but in an  interview  that We made him declare himself an atheist "from an ethical point of view", respectful of believers and open to the possibility of the parapsychological (unlike his colleague and friend, the Argentine Mario Bunge (1919-2020), a clear critic of the religious and paranormal statements). 

[2] In Latin, solercia: Industry, ability and cunning to do or deal with something.

[3] There were not yet specialized faculty journals as there are now.

[4]  To date, Eupraxofia has 17 issues published: 4 printed and 13 digital, and Neo-Skepsis  has 16 issues published to date: 4 printed and 12 digital.

[5] Initially it was called Skeptics on the radio and it was broadcast over the open signal and on the Internet from a station in Lima (I had the pleasure of being one of the first co-hosts).  

[6] Such as Peruvian Atheism (101 thousand followers), Peruvian Atheism Reloaded (2 thousand), Official Community of Peruvian Atheism (803 members), Atheists-Peru (2,800 followers), Atheists and Free Thinkers of Peru (3,600), Cusco Ateo (34 thousand), Scientific Naturalist Humanism (593), the Secular Humanist Circle-Trujillo (165 members) or the Humanists of Huancayo (121 followers).

By Manuel A. Paz y Miño , Peruvian philosopher, teacher, author and secular humanist activist. He directs Ediciones de Filosofía Aplicada and is president of the Institute of Rationalist Humanism of Peru (IHURA-PERU).

(Translated from the article in Spanish "El humanismo secular en el Perú" by Google Translator, and reviewed by the author). 


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